New Beginnings

Hello we are 3 people in the process of setting up a new Geolocigal & Environmental scanning company. We are currently looking for a name for our new company and because we love the latin language, we would love to use the language in the company title. As it is a new beginning (fresh start) and there are three of us there, I would like to get the latin translations for the following words:

New Beginning
Fresh Start
Three people
New Venture

I would greatly appreciate your input also as it is suprisingly difficult to come up with a name which all three of us can agree on.

I think just nova initia for "new beginnings" and nova coepta for "new ventures" is fine.

Andy dixit:

Hmm... could be. Cicero uses coeptus, but since it has no modifiers, I can't really tell if it is in the singular or plural.

So, yeah, I'll go with your correction.

Novi coeptus.

Thanks!

You don't necessarily need modifiers to determine an ambiguous form. If, as I suspect, you are referring to this passage in Cicero's de Finibus (Atque ipsa hominis institutio si loqueretur hoc diceret, primos suos quasi coeptus appetendi fuisse ut se conservaret in ea natura in qua ortus esset) the word coeptus can only be accusative plural as it is in indirect discourse, meaning the singular would have to be coeptum.